AMERICA IS NOT ALONE!
The whole world has gun rights—
and we have a lot to learn from each other!

The struggle to protect the precious human right to keep and bear arms is a global fight. It is being waged against vicious anti-rights bigotry that quietly flourishes internationally. The days of hiding this anti-rights agenda are over.

The idea that the U.S. is the only nation with a strong gun culture with many tens of millions of supporters is untrue. That myth is promoted by people who want to hide the truth from you.
Gun owners are active and dedicated worldwide. You should get in touch with this important side of the gun-rights debate!

All nations have gun rights on the books.

They all have ranges and stores and clubs.

Many have gun policies that exceed America’s, from which we can all learn and grow.

The Worldwide Gun Owner's Guide unlocks a hidden truth about gun ownership—it so fundamental a human right that it exists and is honored worldwide. That's despite efforts by bad governments and the UN to shut it down or pretend it doesn’t even exist, to keep their citizens under control.

The Worldwide Gun Owner’s Guide is a game changer that will open your eyes.

• Who can have guns • How to obtain firearms • What firearms are legal •
• Ammunition, suppressors, full-autos, handloading and special weapons •
• Where you can shoot • Local color, history, background and travel tips •
• Clubs, contacts and the local scene • Pricing and availability too! •

The Worldwide Gun Owner’s Guide
Only $19.95
368 pages!

This book belongs in your gun-book library.
Nothing like it has ever been published before!

Now, what have we learned from all this? Quite a lot actually. Neither the bleeding-heart anti-gun-rights liberals nor the died-in-the-wool cold-dead-finger conservatives may relish some of the findings, but at least now the debate can take place in the light of day.

• Every nation studied has a gun culture, gun laws and gun buffs.

• The idea that America stands alone on gun freedoms is a myth.

• Contrary to popular belief, America does not have the greatest firearm freedom, ranked only 9th out of 62, with an 83% firearm-freedom rating.

• Nations that have guidelines and access to firearms that exceed what U.S. citizens have set a good example and can be
emulated.

• Perpetuation of the myth that America is unique regarding guns, by the media, anti-rights activists, politicians and the UN, is
harmful to freedom and does a gross disservice to the world’s gun owners.

• For the first time in history, the world can see what its gun laws are.

• Prospects for the world’s access to improved gun rights are good.

• Even the most repressive gun laws contain the seeds of freedom and respect for some level of gun rights. Those seeds deserve nurturing and removing the obstacles for growth.

• A law that says you can only have firearm X if you jump through flaming hoops is a guarantee that you can indeed have firearm X. What’s needed then, from a legal and cultural standpoint, is X + 1 and a fire extinguisher.

• People from diverse backgrounds both here and abroad can at last learn about their homeland’s approach, and have a basis from which to improve conditions. To quote Steve Maniscalco, “If you knew all your rights you might demand them.”

• The days of criticizing and attacking America for having the best gun rights are over.

• The most repressive world regimes are exposed and can get attention they sorely need, for improvement and restoration of human rights.

• The black market for civilian guns is discreet and apart from other criminal activity.

• Government efforts to deny peoples’ rights have a predictable effect on the black market—it supports growth.

• While many foreign nations contribute to the effort to disarm innocent people, others support and encourage wise, healthy gun ownership and safe use.

• Nations with the best gun laws have parallels with better economies, better respect for the rule of law and private-property rights, and the freest markets.

<snip>

Endless, fruitless and costly campaigns to disarm the innocent are hypocritical and immoral. They are wasteful, ultimately ineffective and doomed to failure. Continually pursuing that course borders on insanity, but at least it’s expensive, and diverts scarce law-enforcement resources towards managing the innocent and away from where they’re really needed—disarming criminals first. Government proposals that leave the power brokers fully armed and leave the populace defenseless “for their own safety,” are suspect at best and openly tyrannical at worst.

Many American anti-gun proposals have their origins in the practices of repressive regimes overseas. It’s well past time to curtail that and adopt instead some of the more freedom-oriented practices. America can look to the nations that outrank her for ideas. The Swiss stand out as a model from which we can learn and grow.

The world’s governments should provide for efficient, easy methods of private firearms ownership. The Swiss understand the formula, support the shooting arts and sports, encourage training for all citizens all year long, and no one accuses them of being warlike—just the opposite—the well-armed Swiss are peacemakers.